
Why, this, of course. What a strange question.
[quote]doogie wrote:
Remember the Titans
When Julius is walking through the white neighborhood and the cop pulls up beside him. There’s that tension and then the cop starts talking football.[/quote]
Just about every scene in that movie is moving. Great film.
-dizzle
300: -When Leonidas is screaming at the end in slow motion while the monologue is being said.
-Leonidas: “Spartans! What is your profession!?”
-Spartan Army: “HOO! HOO! HOO!”
Jarhead: Jamie Foxx as Staff Sgt. Sykes and squad in Jarhead
-Sykes: “Do you have what it takes to be the meanest, the cruelest, the most savage unforgiving motherfuckers in God’s cruel kingdom?”
-Squad: “Yes, Staff Seargant!”
-Sykes: “Will you be able to one day say, “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil because I am the baddest motherfucker in the goddamn valley”?”
Squad: “Yes, Staff Sergeant!”
Sykes: “We shall fucking see!”
Saving Private Ryan : The final scene when the old man who was supposed to be Matt Damon is kneeling on the floor at the grave of Tom Hanks and asks his wife to tell him he’s a good man and that he led a good life. (I almost cried just thinking about it)
Boondock Saints : just about every scene, but specifically when they kill Rocco.
There are so many. I need to post tomorrow when I have time.
-dizzle
Robocop
*When they destroyed Murphy with those shotgun blasts and then Clarence shot him right through the dome.
*When Murphy is finally Robocop and he has a dream.
*When he’s walking through his old house and has images of his family running through his head. The part where he wife says “I have something to tell you” Pauses" I love" and he reacts with anger always gets to me.
The Punisher
*Scene at the end when he’s about to kill himself, has a flashback, and then doesn’t. The music really helps the scene. Plus, the movie has personal meaning to me.
Lethal Weapon
*When Riggs(Mel) was gonna kill himself but breaks down, puts the gun away, and says “see you later…much later”
*When he and Murtaugh are captured, he breaks free, saves Murtaugh and his daughter. Specifically when he twists this guy around, holds his head down, shoots him through the chest, and screams “Who’s fucking next”
I’ll think of some more later.

I like some of the old classic movies. One that comes to mind is “Brian’s Song” (original). There are a lot of moving scenes, but one of the best is the Sayers’ speech upon winning the Halas Award.
American History X:
Pretty much the whole movie.
Braveheart:
My Dog Skip:
Not From a movie but:
A Classic:
Funny:
Had to:
We all remember:
Surprised us all:
Great thread; keep it going guys.
Needed to add: Forest Gump pretty much the whole goddamn movie.
[quote]Zap Branigan wrote:
Doug Adams wrote:
Dragonvash wrote:
Doug Adams wrote:
From Donnie Brasco, a movie that really isn’t holding up too well over the years:
I haven’t seen this movie in a long time but I loved it when it was released. What do you mean by your statement? That it doesn’t hold the test of time, that it didn’t get the praise it deserved, or it didn’t hold up well for you?
When I watched it recently, I realized Lefty basically gave Donnie a written blueprint of how things operate. There were only those little scenes at the beginning and one later on where Lefty was suspicious. I’d think someone in that line of work would be more cautious. For lack of a better term, I’d feel the movie isn’t “rewatchable”.
It is based on a true story.[/quote]
Keyword being “based”, not “accurately recreated”. It simply felt like they were dumbing things down for audience, like people who would go to watch this movie haven’t seen all previously released gangster movies.
As for another scene:
Air Force One, after Harrison Ford kicks Gary Oldman off the plane and he has to make it back across the Kazakhstan border with their fighters on his tail. The White House decides to send their jets in to fend them off. Just when it looks like the bad guys are set to bring down Air Force One, the american jets show up just in time to bring the pain.
The ending of La Bamba, when Ritchie’s family is listening to the news of his death on the radio, then Ritchie’s brother screams out his name while sleepwalk is playing…
It is still so hard to watch. That whole scene always makes me cry.
RENT: The Musical
The opening and closing songs are classic that just make you stop and think. However, the hardest song to get through is the one where you see Angel die.
[quote]Steamroller wrote:
RENT: The Musical
The opening and closing songs are classic that just make you stop and think. However, the hardest song to get through is the one where you see Angel die.[/quote]
You mean this one?
I keed!
The scene in “The Last Samurai”, where Captain Algren is helping his friend/former enemy Kasimoto take his own life, so that he can die with honor.
As he is dying, he looks past Tom Cruise’s character to the cherry trees, covered with blossoms, and says" Perfect…they are all perfect."
(This refers back to a prior scene in the movie, where the two characters were talking about Bushido, and living as warriors.)
As to a funny scene, from “The Thing” when they first encounter the creature in the form of a dog, and one of the guys asks what it is, the dog-keeper says “I don’t know…but it’s weird and pissed off.” ![]()
After that…it has to be the scene mentioned earlier in this thread from Braveheart.
Leon - When Oldman shoots him in the back just as it looks like he’s miraculously escaped and we’re gonna get a happy ever after. “This is for Matilda!” Great movie.
Bladerunner, again. The end scene.
Magnolia - The scene where Cruise’s character is found out by the reporter and he just flips inside, but tries desperately not let his rage come out. The intensity is brilliant. Also the scene when his father opens his eyes and sees him for a split second before he dies. Great stuff.
Shawshank Redemption - take your pic. But i like the bit when Robins and Freeman meet up on the beach in Mexico. Robins’ dream has come true.
Gladiator - When Crowe dies at the end. I like the music and the depiction of his heaven in the fields with his family.
Tombstone: The scene on the train platform where the Earps are leaving after Morgan’s death. Ike and another cowboy appear to kill them off. They call Virgil’s name and ask where Wyatt is while raising a shotgun to his face. Wyatt calls out “Right Behind you Ike!” and blows away the other cowboy. Ike falls to his knees begging for mercy. Wyatt walks up, turns Ike’s head up towards his with his boot, slowly turns it, and slashes his mouth with his spurs.
Just watching that scene and seeing the vindication in Kurt Russel’s (Wyatt’s) face as he declares his intention to kill all the cowboys makes chills run down my spine.
“Return of A Man Called Horse”
A lot of awesome scenes.
The opener when he is in church and decides to return to the Yellow hand tribe, and leave every thing behind. His wealth family tittle.
When he goes to the sweat lodge, and recieves his vision,and is told, “Tell the truth with all humility that is what is is to be a man”
Jhon Wayne’s “The Cowboys”
When the kids take over the cattle drive after The Duke is killed, exact revenge,and finnish the drive.
I wish I knew kids with that much character, but hey I left the horse and cattle world what would I expect.
“Lonesome Dove” Cap’n Karl taken his partners dead body all the way back from Montanna to Texas, cause he gave his partner his word.
scenes that move me change as it depends what mood I am in or what is going on with my life…
this one here is appropriate for whats going on in my life now…and that could change next week…
rocky 3–scene on the beach with his wife
rocky 5—scene in the street with his wife…
[quote]Fishdog70 wrote:
Tombstone: The scene on the train platform where the Earps are leaving after Morgan’s death. Ike and another cowboy appear to kill them off. They call Virgil’s name and ask where Wyatt is while raising a shotgun to his face. Wyatt calls out “Right Behind you Ike!” and blows away the other cowboy. Ike falls to his knees begging for mercy. Wyatt walks up, turns Ike’s head up towards his with his boot, slowly turns it, and slashes his mouth with his spurs.
Just watching that scene and seeing the vindication in Kurt Russel’s (Wyatt’s) face as he declares his intention to kill all the cowboys makes chills run down my spine.[/quote]
Good one, fish dog.
Tombstone: When Kurt Russell slaps down Billy Bob Thorton and says “Are you gonna do something or just stand there and bleed”
Tombstone: When Kurt and the gang are hunting down cowboys, one cowboy is reaching for a pipe to smoke and grabs Kurt’s gun barrel(don’t be gay), puts it in his mouth, and tries smoking it. The camera zooms in on russel’s face and you hear a gunshot as he pulls the trigger.
[quote]swissrugby67 wrote:
Great thread; keep it going guys.
Needed to add: Forest Gump pretty much the whole goddamn movie.
[/quote]
Well said.